Plum City – (AbelDanger.net): United States Marine Field McConnell has linked BBC snuff-film productions – apparently authorized by Lord Privy Seal Baroness Tina Stowell – to Serco’s alleged use of a Cassidian “Rent Car” 4G wireless van to transmit money-shot images of the killings by Black Hand journeymen at or near the Charlie Hebdo offices in Paris on 1/7.

Black Hand* – Captains or journeymen of livery companies with “Licenses to Kill, Extort and Bribe” namely City of London Honourable Artillery Company 1527, Master Mariners and Air Pilots 1929 and Ancient and Honorable Artillery Company of Massachusetts 1638 whose alumni include U.S. Presidents James Monroe, James Garfield, Calvin Coolidge and John F. Kennedy.

McConnell claims that in 1962, a Stowell predecessor, the late pedophile Lord Privy Seal and commander of the Honourable Artillery Company, Lt. Col. Edward Heath, outsourced the U.K.’s four-minute warning system, the NPL cesium clock and Telstar communications to Serco’s Black Hand journeymen to synchronize contract-killing operations in the United Kingdom and the United States to within 1 μs of each other (previous efforts were only accurate to 2,000 μs).

McConnell claims that Lt. Col. Heath sent Stowell to work at the UK Ministry of Defence (1986-1988), the British Embassy in the United States (1988-1991) and the U.K. Prime Minister John Major’s Press Office (1993-1997) before placing her as Head of Corporate Affairs at the BBC and the Head of [Pedophile?] Communications for the BBC Chairmen: Gavyn Davies, Michael Grade and Michael Lyons who, jointly or severally, appear to have had Privy Seal authority for BBC snuff-film productions on 9/11 and 7/7.

BBC Reported Building 7 Collapse

20 Minutes Before It Fell

BBC Conspiracy Files: 7/7

McConnell notes that Serco’s Black Hand commanders tasked Ms. Stowell with the job of steering the Marriage (Same Sex Couples) Bill for England and Wales through the House of Lords and he alleges that they then gave her the Privy Seal authority in July 2014 which she used to approve BBC snuff-film productions at the QZ8501 and Charlie Hebdo crime scenes.

McConnell notes that Serco’s Black Hand commanders appear to have equipped Barack Obama with the Cassidian (Airbus) 4G wireless system so he can watch the BBC’s Privy Seal snuff films in real time!

McConnell invites rebuttal of his allegation that the Lord Privy Seal, Baroness Tina Stowell, authorized the BBC to produce a snuff film with images transmitted from a Serco-Cassidian 4G wireless van which showed or purported to show Black Hand journeymen shooting victims at or near the Charlie Hebdo offices in Paris on January 7, 2015.

“Paris Killings: Media Lies, Unanswered Questions. Was it a False Flag?By Stephen LendmanGlobal Research, January 11, 2015
On Friday, three days rocking Paris ended. Cherif and Said Kouachi took refuge in a Dammartin-en-Goele printing company facility.

French security forces stormed it. Reports said gunfire was exchanged. Both brothers were killed.

Threatened to kill them if police stormed the facility where the Kouachi brothers were holed up.

French security forces moved in. Killing Coulibaly. Four hostages were found dead. Five others wounded. Dead men tell no tales.

A previous article suggested Charlie Hebdo killings were less about terrorism and more about false flag deception.

Kouachi brothers and Coulibaly were well known to police for years. French intelligence services closely monitored them.

Paris prosecutor Francois Molins said both brothers spoke “more than 500 times” to Coulibaly and his girlfriend Hayat Boumedienne by telephone.

Five people remain in detention. Including the wife of one of the Kouachi brothers. Reuters said one Kouachi brother was “identified by his identity card, which had been left in the (abandoned) getaway car.”

A policeman was reportedly shot in the head. No blood was seen. One account said an officer emerged from a police car.

Another claimed he came out of a police station. A third had him on a bicycle. One source said both brothers returned to their car after killing the officer. Shouting: “We avenged the Prophet Muhammad.”

Did French security forces know about the planned Charlie Hebdo attack in advance?” [Media reports confirm foreknowledge]. Were they complicit? Did they want this type incident to take place?

Did they produce “Je suis Charlie” posters in advance? After Wednesday’s incident, they appeared straightaway. An ocean of signs. Images televised worldwide.

Were Washington’s dirty hands involved? Were Israel’s? Israeli IBA Channel 1 deputy editor Amchai Stein was at the scene at the time. He posted photos of the shooting.

Netanyahu announced that he would sent an Israeli SWAT team. Specialists in siege operations. On standby to aid French security forces.

What about Mossad and CIA operatives? Were they involved? In planning and executing what happened.

Were Kouachi brothers and Coulibaly convenient patsies? As well as third suspect Hamyd Mourad.

His school friends twittered otherwise. Saying he was in class with them whenWednesday’s attack occurred.

After seeing his name mentioned, he turned himself in to police in Charleville-Mezierres 145 miles northeast of Paris. Nowhere near where Charlie Hebdo killings took place.
Evidence shows French security forces closely monitored both Kouachi brothers andCoulibaly.

A Le Figero report cited French Interior Minister Bernard Cazeneuve saying they were “probably followed” prior to what happened.

Hyped media claims about Charlie Hebdo attacks targeting free expression are nonsense. Lots of people are angry about MSM reports they dislike. Editorial staff killings don’t follow.
False flags are a US tradition. Other countries use them. Black flag operations designed to deceive.

Stephen Lendman lives in Chicago. He can be reached at lendmanstephen@sbcglobal.net. His new book as editor and contributor is titled “Flashpoint in Ukraine: US Drive for Hegemony Risks WW III.” http://www.claritypress.com/LendmanIII.html Visit his blog site at sjlendman.blogspot.com. Listen to cutting-edge discussions with distinguished guests on the Progressive Radio News Hour on the Progressive Radio Network. It airs three times weekly: live on Sundays at 1PM Central time plus two prerecorded archived programs.”

“Alcatel-Lucent and Cassidian demonstrate interoperable 4G broadband wireless communications Alcatel-Lucent together with Cassidian (formerly EADS Defence & Security) and PlantCML®, the North American subsidiary of Cassidian, for the first time demonstrated interoperability between a live broadband LTE wireless network and digital land mobile radio (LMR) commonly used by local police, fire departments and other emergency responders.

The joint mission-critical communications solution was demonstrated at the 2010 Association of Public-Safety Communications Officials (APCO) Conference in Houston and highlighted a variety of voice, video and data applications. The demonstrations showed previews of new wireless public safety applications including the latest in command and control, interoperable field communications, operations management, mobile video, identity verification and more.

Access to high-speed, broadband wireless networks enhances communications and situational awareness within and between public safety agencies while helping to streamline operations and reduce the costs associated with maintaining multiple non-interoperable networks. By using LTE, the most robust wireless technology available, the Alcatel-Lucent and Cassidian solution delivers far more types of information including mobile video faster.

“Ultimately, it is expected that our joint solutions will deliver voice and data capabilities that are today associated with fixed public safety centers to any location, at any time,” said Darrin J. Reilly, chief operating officer, PlantCML. “This will bring state and local agencies more operational capabilities, much needed interoperability, and most importantly choice and control in the solutions deployed.”

In the short term, LTE-based solutions will provide high-speed remote access to databases, report management systems, e-mail and internal/external Internet-based resources and will eventually support rich graphics and streaming mobile video. That could give rescue teams instant access to blueprints to help them more quickly locate survivors in an earthquake. It would enable police officers to use digital imaging to catalog crime scene photos or file reports remotely, allowing them to spend more time in the field.

“Real-time access to mission-related information—anytime, anywhere— improves coordination and response time and ultimately saves lives,” said Ken Wirth, President, 4G/LTE Wireless Networks, Alcatel- Lucent. “This solution marks an important milestone in the collaboration we announced with Cassidian which brings together a force in the global public safety market with a leader in 4G LTE as well as in other critical communications technologies.”

Alcatel-Lucent is at the forefront of commercial deployments of LTE. At the 2010 APCO conference, Alcatel- Lucent’s “Rover” Incident Command Center was on display. Live LTE demos took place, including: emergency call handling of 9-1-1 calls with LTE-enabled video and automatic number identification; mobile radio dispatch with LTE communicating with PlantCML’s CORP25 VoIP product on the computer; and two fixed cameras within the booth that streamed mobile video with low latency. According to Danny Locklear, VP Marketing at Alcatel-Lucent, this technology “enables the masses to have good quality video in a mobile environment.” Real time means three times less latency. Some of the key expectations of LTE include: faster way of passing data; allow more users in a cost-effective manner; interoperability. The openness of the interfaces and the economies of scale are very critical. A shared network means relationships with service providers beyond what private networks offer. Although there is an increased public awareness about LTE, “we need more education on 4G; we need more people on it,” Locklear stated. Developed by Cassidian in Europe and also shown at APCO was the Enhanced Situational Awareness Concept Demonstration. Basically a cityscape over a glass table, it allows for 3D navigation from a command and control perspective, driven by touchscreen capabilities. Users can touch or use a joystick to manually move views, and they can link directly from the table to radios to P25 network to call specific units during a crisis situation. An alarm will sound and a red box pops up on the table’s screen if a 9-1-1 call comes in. Users can send video from the table to a mobile unit so officers in the field have the best situational awareness possible. An intuitive platform for defense and security at both the national and local levels, the Enhanced Situational Concept Demo will be deployed in the States in late 2011.

G8/G20 Summits & Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP)

Cassidian, through subsidiary PlantCML®, announced that its CORP25 digital, trunked land mobile radio system served a mission critical role in security during the recent G8 and G20 Summits in Huntsville and Toronto, Ontario, Canada, handling in excess of 264,000 radio transmissions. The Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP worked in concert with the Ontario Provincial Police, the Canadian Forces, Toronto Police Service and other law enforcement and security agencies to ensure the public safety of the thousands of summit attendees, reporters, visitors and residents.

One of the most rapidly deployed (in less than seven months) large scale mission critical systems of its kind, this state-of-the-art, open-standard IP-based CORP25 digital radio communications network not only serviced the RCMP’s critical communications needs during the G8 and G20 Summits, it will also be expanded to provide ongoing safety and security for the province of Ontario, Canada. The APCO Project 25 (P25) digital public safety radio communication network, along with command and control centers, will now serve the entire province of Ontario as a component of the new Central Region Operation Communication System.

The G8 and G20 summits are held annually for world leaders to discuss topics of global concern ranging from terrorism to the economy. Canadian public safety officials have stated the summits represented the largest deployment of security personnel for a major event in Canadian history. It is estimated that this deployment surpasses that of the 2010 Vancouver Olympics with more sites and more users’ devices covering a larger geographical area, all implemented in less than 25 percent of the time.

“The Cassidian CORP25 system worked reliably, surpassing high levels of standard Quality of Service metrics. With more than 2,500 terminals used during the event, security operations processed more than 58,000 radio transmissions per day, all handled seamlessly during the events,” said Chuck Sackley, VP and GM for Land Mobile Radio Solutions.

“More and more, we see organizers of large events—political gatherings, sporting competitions, concerts or multi-jurisdictional security events—opting for open standardsbased, interoperable digital radio networks to help them coordinate the efforts of their security personnel,” said Pierre Delestrade, president and CEO, Cassidian Canada. “Cassidian is proud to provide the security backbone necessary to assure the smooth running of such high-profile events as well as longterm communications for the future of the region.”

To provide the most current equipment available, Cassidian worked with Motorola, Zetron and EXACOM. EXACOM supplied its Hindsight-G2™ Multi-Media P25 Logging Recorder System. This recording system incorporates the latest in public safety recording initiatives with integrations to address both Next-Generation 9-1-1 (NG9-1- 1) technology and P25 IP radio systems. Zetron provided its Advanced Communication (Acom) dispatch console system. Acom is a fully digital switching and multiplexing system that represents the state-of-the-art in dispatch console technology for mission-critical applications. The Acom system for this project included functionality that was optimized specifically for this application. As previously announced in May, Motorola XTS 2500 digital portable radios were also part of the total solution.

Its deployment for the G8 and G20 summits was another example of how the open, standards-compliant nature of CORP25 enables public safety agencies, such as the RCMP “O” Division, to select components from multiple vendors to create a “best in class” network that is tailored to address the specific needs of the agency at the lowest cost of ownership as well as extending the life of the network.

Photo courtesy of Cassidian and PlantCML.”

“High Quality Audio Recorder Designed for DSLR Filmmaking.

Mixer Integrated Linear PCM Recorder for DSLR.

TASCAM’s Award Winning DR-60D

TASCAM’s award winning DR-60D is the new audio recording solution for on-set filmmakers and videographers using DSLR’s. For years, filmmakers have been trying different methods for recording audio – includng the use of bulky recorders designed for music and trying to transform the inferior audio technology built-into DSLR’s. Now TASCAM has designed an answer that pros and amateurs alike have been waiting for.

The DR-60D is a brand new 4-track solid-state recorder utilizing TASCAM’s decades of experience. The recorder utilizes high-grade HDDA pre-amps, legendary AD converters, and a durable but lightweight structure and shape. This device will fit snuggly under any camera or into any rig, and record up to 96kHz/24-bit high quality audio straight to SD/SDHC media. Filmmakers have at their disposal two 1/4″-XLR Locking Combo MIC/LINE Inputs, 3.5mm Stereo MIC Input, Camera In, Camera Out, Line Out and Headphone Out. Both 1/4″-XLR Combo Inputs supply +48V Phantom Power and the 3.5mm Input supplies Plug-In Power for microphones requiring a bias voltage.

The DR-60D is incredibly easy to use, employing TASCAM’s very popular user interface and external controls for every major operation. The body structure, soft-touch keys and dials are designed specifically to help eliminate handling noise. The multiple record modes include, 4-Channel Record, Auto Record and TASCAM’s Dual Record “Safety Track” Mode make the DR-60D one of the most versatile recorders on the market.”

Though one of the oldest offices in government anywhere, it has no particular function today because the use of a privy seal has been obsolete for centuries; thus the office has generally been used as a kind of Minister without Portfolio. Since the premiership ofClement Attlee, the position of Lord Privy Seal has frequently been combined with that of Leader of the House of Lords or Leader of the House of Commons. The office of Lord Privy Seal, unlike those of Leader of the Lords or Commons, is eligible for a ministerial salary under the Ministerial and other Salaries Act 1975.[1]

During the reign of Edward I, prior to 1307, the Privy Seal was kept by the Keeper of the Wardrobe.[2] The Lord Privy Seal was the president of the Court of Requests during its existence.

….

The wardrobe, along with the chamberlain, made up the personal part of medievalEnglish government known as the king’s household. Originally the room where the king’s clothes, armour and treasure was stored the term was expanded to describe its contents and then the department of clerks who ran it. The wardrobe treasure of gold and jewels, funded by but not under the control of the treasury (and therefore Parliament) enabled the king to make secret and rapid payments to fund his diplomatic and military operations.”

“SERCO has come a long way since the 1960s when it ran the ‘four-minute warning’ system to alert the nation to a ballistic missile attack.

Today its £10.3bn order book is bigger than many countries’ defence budgets. It is bidding for a further £8bn worth of contracts and sees £16bn of ‘opportunities’.

Profit growth is less ballistic. The first-half pre-tax surplus rose 4% to £28.1m, net profits just 1% to £18m. Stripping out goodwill, the rise was 17%, with dividends up 12.5% to 0.81p.